For those two of you who haven't seen it yet,
http://www.icann.org/tlds/stld-apps-19mar04/tel-telnic.htm
-John
John Morgan Salomon wrote:
For those two of you who haven't seen it yet,
I'm sure it will be wildly successful like the .aero TLD.
On Fri, 2005-07-01 at 11:24 +0200, Mickey Coggins wrote:
John Morgan Salomon wrote:
For those two of you who haven't seen it yet,
Funny that the company and the sponsoring one are the same but list themselves as different entities.
ICANN doesn't know about e164.org yet I guess.
I'm sure it will be wildly successful like the .aero TLD.
Of course it will: i.live.in.the.biggest.luxury.suite.in.my.own.ho.tel. has.cable-tv.in.a.mo.tel. wants.to.have.the.numberof.your.na.tel. give.me.cookies.or.ill.tel.
Ah bloody, I am not so good at these things, check these and adapt: http://www.garion.org/spamcalc/test/sorted06.txt
Or otherwise said: some companies are going to make quite some money out of selling silly names which they store in a database.
Another use: http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/fs/2004/32678.htm aka the "Terrorist Exclusion List", one could thus use .tel as a blacklist, well there are of course enough terrorist in this world when you are looking from the US perspective. .terrorist coming soon :)
Greets, Jeroen
Another use: http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/fs/2004/32678.htm aka the "Terrorist Exclusion List", one could thus use .tel as a blacklist, well there are of course enough terrorist in this world when you are looking from the US perspective. .terrorist coming soon :)
Brilliant idea - create .ter and then all the evil guys would use that TLD, then the good guys could easily catch them. Gee, the world is black and white, after all. :-)
On Fri, 2005-07-01 at 14:21 +0200, Mickey Coggins wrote:
Another use: http://www.state.gov/s/ct/rls/fs/2004/32678.htm aka the "Terrorist Exclusion List", one could thus use .tel as a blacklist, well there are of course enough terrorist in this world when you are looking from the US perspective. .terrorist coming soon :)
Brilliant idea - create .ter and then all the evil guys would use that TLD, then the good guys could easily catch them. Gee, the world is black and white, after all. :-)
Just like .xxx this is really going to work :)
I *would* have sort of understood a .kids, .friendly or a .prudent domain actually. Then when those domains got monitored really well those sites could really be 'friendly' to kids and other such types. .xxx is not going to cut it, I guess ICANN didn't read RFC3675... http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3675.txt
Greets, Jeroen
Hi
Just like .xxx this is really going to work :)
I *would* have sort of understood a .kids, .friendly or a .prudent domain actually. Then when those domains got monitored really well those sites could really be 'friendly' to kids and other such types. .xxx is not going to cut it, I guess ICANN didn't read RFC3675... http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3675.txt
I like OpenNIC's .geek :)
http://www.opennic.unrated.net/tlds.html
Daniel